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DJ Creepy shares his MP3j tips and tricks
With the rise in popularity of the iPod and iTunes, amateur and semi-pro MP3js are adding a high-tech flavor to bars and clubs everywhere. We had the opportunity to speak with DJ Creepy and get his take on the MP3j Revolution. He was also kind enough to share some of his tips and tricks for all you amateur MP3js out there now making names for yourselves. Enjoy!
I don't DJ with an iPod, though a bartender friend of mine uses his NaviPod to run his club from the bar in the other room. MP3J-ing is very cool but it's for the hobbyist DJ, not the pros. Don't get me wrong; I respect the feel of vinyl. I support having the turntable classified as a musical instrument. Scratching is an art. I have even more respect for vinyl encoded with time code for remote control of a file (though 30 codes/second seems a bit slow for editing sound). But with all that said, I like to use a laptop for some low-key shows.
Prior to starting a "low-key" gig, it takes about five minutes to make a new, one-hour playlist in iTunes and to get started. In Party Shuffle I select the new playlist as a Source. This serves as the default to keep the music flowing while I'm distracted. Otherwise I'm adding to Party Shuffle, and the more upcoming songs I display, the more I can improvise the queue. For my real shows, there's no Party Shuffle involved.
iTunes makes it easy to interact while taking song requests from customers. If I don't have it, its usually a download away, and then it's always in my iTunes Library. If doing that or getting a beer takes five or ten minutes, Party Shuffle still does its job for me. People will buy you beers if you play their song, especially when you're already sitting at the bar. If I'm doing a "low-key" DJ gig that doesn't require being on stage, I prefer to sit behind the bar and hang out.
An empty stage confuses people at first. They're used to seeing someone with a table covered with gear and bling bling. By changing desk psychology to bar geek, some people find me more approachable, others less. I don't pretend to be an entertainer, but I have to concentrate on what I'm doing.
Anything specific?
Yeah. When I DJ with my PowerBook, I plug it into a Tascam mixer shrink the main iTunes window to half height and place it at the bottom of the screen. Double-clicking on Party Shuffle opens it into its own window, which I shrink and place at the top, displaying only 10 upcoming songs. In both views, I show only a few critical columns of song info. In this way, I can use the Library for searches on my drive and the iTunes Music Store, while keeping an eye on Party Shuffle song countdowns, in case I want to delete a song from the queue to preserve the mood. Control-clicking on a song in the iTunes Library pops up Party Shuffle commands Add and Play Next, so I can improvise from outside the Party Shuffle view.
Yes, dragging and dropping between the iTunes Library and Party Shuffle can be a bit tricky and takes practice. You have to be quick with manual control or you can interrupt the stream. Fortunately, when using Airport Express, the countdown changes to the next song when it starts to encode the cross fade - about 8 seconds before the end of the current track. In this way, I can avoid butchering by deciding to let the next track play or fade it.
When I don't have a Tascam DJ mixer handy, in one hand I use a Griffin PowerMate to fade out, pause, fade in, while the other hand selects the next track. It starts when I hit the 'return' key. I've also custom programmed my PowerMate to be a democratic 'veto' button. If anyone hates my selection, they pound the PowerMate and it skips to the next.
iTunes / Preferences / Audio has the cross fade setting - I leave it set to max 12 seconds, for about six seconds overlap per track, though it is audibly less than that. I love this.
All in all, this method [laptop] has most advantages, plus cross fades and wireless audio. No external mixer or extra iPod needed. The downside? It may not fit in your pocket, but fits in your backpack. And it's a lot of exposed hardware. An iPod may disappear in someone else's pocket, but it's not going to fry if you spill a beer on it.
I'd like to see Apple allow other apps to access Airport Express. Unfortunately it is not compatible with products using RogueAmoeba technology like Detour, Audio Hijack, and VolumeLogic because Apple AirTunes bypasses Apple Core Audio. Perhaps there will be some way of mixing more tracks from within iTunes. Another gripe I have for Apple is Party Shuffle's refusal to draw from the 'bottom' of the otherwise unshuffled 'Source' list. Specifically when deleting from the Party Shuffle queue. If anyone at Apple is reading this, please note: Party Shuffle constantly insists upon replacing deleted tracks with others just played or just deleted as opposed to other tracks in the 'Source' list that haven't been played recently. iTunes does log recently played tracks in a Smart' Playlist, this shouldn't be that hard. The Party Shuffle algorithm is just bad! It should rely more on user input rather than some poor attempt at a random number generation. You can work around this problem with a Smart Playlist (see image below). One last thing, I'd also like to see WI-FI added to a future iPod. Among other things, it should be able to broadcast to Airport Express. Either way, I still see iPod as little more than a synchronization of iTunes Playlists. iTunes itself is much more versatile, and, you're already using it for your iPod anyway.
To mix the underlying flavor of my show, I'll open an hour-long ambient effects track into QuickTime Player, and set it to loop. This requires being wired to the sound system. I can play as many simultaneous QT loops as I like. With Detour software and a Griffin iMic, I create a second port for sending separate audio to different speakers (or to a second input on the same speakers, such as a house mixer, or JBL EON 10s). I set Detour to send QuickTime Player's audio to the iMic. I also use Detour to reduce the volume for everything I open into QT Player, while iTunes is still streaming wirelessly to Airport Express. In this way, I can move to the stage, plug in the iMic, and add a second source to the entire mix, controlled from the same laptop, all without interrupting Party Shuffle. For kicks, I thought about being DJ Creamy, but I heard it was already taken. My friend said I'm "creepy" because of my ambient mix. The name just stuck after that.
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